"Power Lines and the Power of Lines: Electricity, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Thinking" by Jennifer Lieberman

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Location: 119 DeBartolo Hall Map

Electrification has touched nearly every aspect of American life. Between 1882 and 1952, it changed daily routines, inspired new art forms, revolutionized the fields of chemistry, biology, and physics—it even changed landscapes and ecosystems. The corporate and scientific dimensions of this history have been told; Dr. Jennifer Lieberman tells the narrative and cultural history. 

Discussing her book, Power Lines: Electricity in American Life and Letters, 1882-1952 (MIT Press, 2017), Lieberman will chronicle how electricity became a metaphor for modern American life in the late nineteenth century. Drawing on Science, Technology, and Society, American Studies, and literary studies, this talk—like the book—demonstrates the importance of studying technology and the humanities together. It will touch on such questions as:

  • What does Jack London have to teach us about electrification—and how might his example help us understand the power outages in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria?
  • How did writers and technologists reconcile fantasies about American individualism with a new emphasis on systems?
  • How is this history usable—what can we learn from it today? 
BIOGRAPHY

Dr. Lieberman is an assistant professor in the English department at the University of North Florida. She holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. From 2011 to 2013 she was a postdoctoral fellow at Cornell University in their Department of Science and Technology Studies. As an interdisciplinary scholar, Dr. Lieberman has held fellowships at the Bakken Library and Museum, the Smithsonian Institute, the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities, and the National Science Foundation. At the University of North Florida, she was a 2016-2017 Community Scholar in the Center for Community Based Learning and was the 2017 Fellow for the Florida Blue Center for Ethics. Additionally, she earned UNF’s Presidential Diversity and Inclusion Award in 2017. She is the author of Power Lines: Electricity in American Life and Letters, 1882-1952.

Sponsored by the Reilly Center for Science Technology and Values, ND Energy, and the Department of American Studies

Originally published at energy.nd.edu.